| Sunday, September 12, 2010 
 Laur @ 1:04 AM
 My Grandmother Calls Me Mija
 
 You speak to me in jumbled Spanish, call
 me mija,
 and I don’t know
 how to tell you
 that I chose to take French, and then
 Ancient Greek (of all things);
 
 you don’t remember—because you remember
 so little
 now, in your
 eighty-sixth year—but
 you once
 refused to teach me
 the language that my last name is in.
 
 You could not have known that after seventeen years of living alone
 after the death of your husband
 in a small, yellowing house in San Marcos, Texas
 with nothing but
 football games and soap operas
 on the television
 to stimulate your mind, it would
 degenerate,
 regress
 back to its first language, your
 native tongue—the one
 that you abolished in your household
 in the interest
 of your boys, that they
 might assimilate, and
 become successful.
 
 My father tries. He says si and sometimes
 agua, but
 like me, he would be just as lost
 in a Mexican market as he is
 when you ask long, rapidly-fired
 questions in slick
 syllables of Spanish that
 bounce
 off of our earlobes, rejected
 by our minds’ inner-dictionaries.
 
 Yet if I could ask you anything, it would be
 how to make the best flour tortillas, because
 somehow
 I know: if you deprived me of my culture,
 you must have had your reasons.
 Labels: grandma r   |